Thursday, September 8, 2011

A Scorecard .... my, my my!

I have now read the post below twice and each time I find myself shaking my head in wonder and amazement at how this country and this President has taken a bad situation and turned it to disaster in such a short period of time.  Then you weigh that against the rancor that exists, as we witnessed in Congress with the debt ceiling debacle early in the summer, and you know, YOU KNOW, the depth of the disaster has yet to be reached.  I am not a doomsday prophet and still the eternal optimist but ...

For three years, actually about six years, I have watched this man, Obama, smoothly glide through the chairs of Congress as a chosen one with his silver tongue, always in campaign mode, able to connect with any demographic group in speech and frankly, had great hopes for this man, Obama.  If you know me you know I have tried to remain center of the politics but still offending some Tea Party friends of mine with my comments and thus realizing it is impossible to remain in the center of the road of not stepping on someones toes in a such a poisonous environment.

What is most poisonous, as I look at this morass through the leadership lens is, well, no leadership.  The WSJ article below is masterfully pieced together with facts and not political jabbing I don't think.  Having worked forty years almost for a Fortune 100 company, as the  article points out rightly, there is no CEO that would have survived such a performance and I saw some good ones and some not so good ones flow through the Fifth Floor. But even the not so good ones FAR surpass the performance of this man, Obama, as the CEO of our once great nation. It really is sad, sickening, but so sad!

My position, versus many friend and colleagues of mine that the country is being  navigated down a distinct course or pathway toward socialism, is that no, there is no way, we are better than that, that simply cannot be!  Well, as I read the numbers and the benchmarks I must admit that I have moved more clearly into the congregates to this sermon of socialism which makes me want to throw up. 

I watched a portion of the Republican debates last night.  I thought Mr. Perry in response to a hardball thrown at him hit the nail squarely on the head when he responded with something close to ...  Obama is either this poorest advised president in history or is an abject liar ... honestly, right now after the scorecard read, I am going with the abject liar leaning as much, as an American, wish I did not. I feel such an internal conflict about this reality as I view it with the darkness still abounding outside.

I have never been sicker of the town halls before the cameras, the teleprompter speeches on seemingly any subject meaning the responses are written by someone else and read and not from the heart.  I keep looking for this man, Obama, and his heart and values and frankly my eyes are tiring from the viewing. 

This man has proven himself incapable of pulling this country out of the ditch which inescapably I keep having this crawling sense that somewhere there is a piece of paper / document that road maps the benchmarks of moving this great nation more to subjugation of the Government.  I think I need another read of ANIMAL FARM ... wait, my students are required to read that this semester so I guess I will be reminded via their comments of what can be and frightfully, seem to be painfully trodding that path.

And all that is the good news! The bad is when I look at the Constitutional succession should something happen to this man, Obama, and see the landscape of Biden and Boehner and numbers two and three in line.  In finishing our morning devotion this morning with my wife, I was so moved by all of this via the article that I prayed yet again for this man, Obama, this nation and for a returning to the principles based on God that made this country the great nation it was.  I do not want to think Obama an evil man but it is getting harder to keep those thoughts out of my mind's eye and my mind's eye is 20/20.  I want to be proud of my nation. I want others to respect and be proud and fearful of this nation but with each passing day that becomes a more distant prospect.

So I guess my glass is really half empty this morning!  Hey sun, hurry up and shine ... I need to see the light of day, please! 



The Wall Street Journal

The Obama Presidency by the Numbers

The president constantly reminds us that he was dealt a difficult hand. But the evidence is overwhelming that he played it poorly.


When it comes to the economy, presidents, like quarterbacks, often get more credit or blame than they deserve. They inherit problems and policies that affect the economy well into their presidencies and beyond. Reagan inherited Carter's stagflation, George H.W. Bush twin financial crises (savings & loan and Third World debt), and their fixes certainly benefited the Clinton economy.

President Obama inherited a deep recession and financial crisis resulting from problems that had been building for years. Those responsible include borrowers and lenders on Wall Street and Main Street, the Federal Reserve, regulatory agencies, ratings agencies, presidents and Congress.

Related Video

Editorial page editor Paul Gigot on President Obama's jobs plan.

Mr. Obama's

And there's plenty to evaluate: an $825 billion stimulus package; the Public-Private Investment Partnership to buy toxic assets from the banks; "cash for clunkers"; the home-buyers credit; record spending and budget deficits and exploding debt; the auto bailouts; five versions of foreclosure relief; numerous lifelines to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; financial regulation and health-care reform; energy subsidies, mandates and moratoria; and constant demands for higher tax rates on "the rich" and businesses.

Consider the direct results of the Obama programs. A few have performed better than expected—e.g., the auto bailouts, although a rapid private bankruptcy was preferable and GM and Chrysler are not yet denationalized successes. But the failed stimulus bill cost an astounding $280,000 per job—over five times median pay—by the administration's inflated estimates of jobs "created or saved," and much more using more realistic estimates.

Cash for clunkers cost $3 billion, just to shift car sales forward a few months. The Public-Private Investment Partnership, despite cheap federal loans, generated 3% of the $1 trillion claimed, and toxic assets still hobble some financial institutions. The Dodd-Frank financial reform law institutionalized "too big to fail" amid greater concentration of banking assets and mortgages in Fannie and Freddie. The foreclosure relief program permanently modified only a small percentage of the four million mortgages the president promised. And even Mr. Obama now admits that the shovels weren't ready in all those "shovel-ready" stimulus projects.

Perpetually overpromising and underdelivering is not remotely good enough, not even for government work. No corporate CEO could survive such a clear history of failure. The economic records set on Mr. Obama's watch really are historic (see nearby table). These include the first downgrade of sovereign U.S. debt in American history, and, relative to GDP, the highest federal spending in U.S. history save the peak years of World War II, plus the highest federal debt since just after World War II.

The employment picture doesn't look any better. The fraction of the population working is the lowest since 1983. Long-term unemployment is by far the highest since the Great Depression. Job growth during the first two years of recovery after a severe recession is the slowest in postwar history.
Moreover, the home-ownership rate is the lowest since 1965 and foreclosures are at a post-Depression high. And perhaps most ominously, the share of Americans paying income taxes is the lowest in the modern era, while dependency on government is the highest in U.S. history.

That's quite a record, although not what Mr. Obama and his supporters had in mind when they pronounced this presidency historic.
President Obama constantly reminds us, with some justification, that he was dealt a difficult hand. But the evidence is overwhelming that he played it poorly. His big government spending, debt and regulation fix has clearly failed. Relative to previous recoveries from deep recessions, the results are disastrous. A considerable fraction of current joblessness, lower living standards, dependency on government and destroyed savings is the result. Worse, his debt explosion will be a drag on economic growth for years to come.

Mr. Obama was never going to enthusiastically embrace pro-market, pro-growth policies. But many of his business and Wall Street supporters (some now former supporters) believed he would govern more like President Clinton, post-1994. After a stunning midterm defeat, Mr. Clinton embarked on an "era of big government is over" collaboration with a Republican Congress to reform welfare, ratify the North American Free Trade Agreement and balance the budget. But Mr. Obama starts far further left than Mr. Clinton and hence has a much longer journey to the center.

The president still has time to rebound from his economic policy missteps by promoting permanent, predictable policies to strengthen forecasted anemic growth. But do Mr. Obama and his advisers realize their analysis of the economic crisis was flawed and their attempted solutions mostly misconceived? That vast spending, temporary tax rebates and social engineering did little of lasting value at immense cost? That the prospect of ever more regulation and taxation created widespread uncertainty and severely damaged incentives and confidence? That the repeated attempts to prevent markets (e.g., the housing market) from naturally bottoming and rebounding have created confusion and inhibited recovery?

Can Mr. Obama change course, given the evidence that the economy responded poorly to top-down direction from Washington rather than the bottom-up individual initiative that is the key to strong growth? Is he willing to rein in the entitlement state erected under radically different economic and demographic conditions? And will he reform the corporate and personal income taxes with much lower rates on a broader base? Or is he going to propose the same failed policies—more spending, social engineering, temporary tax cuts and permanent tax hikes?

On the answer to these questions, much of Mr. Obama's, and the nation's, future rests.
Mr. Boskin, a professor of economics at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, chaired the Council of Economic Advisers under President George H.W. Bush.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The detonator is being set ...

With so much noise about debt, the Middle East, European banks and the euro, 9/11, etc, etc, the article I paste in below will easily go unnoticed or even read. I select it for, as I have said on these pages before, I believe the posture of Israel in relation to the Middle East holds great sway in the politics and economics of the world but also potential cataclysmic implication as described in the Bible.

Turkey, as mysterious and much misunderstood and oft disrespected force is, in my opinion, the strategic rock that is holding a degree of balance between Europe and the fiery elements of the Middle East.  With the third or fourth largest standing Army in the world, a strong economy and solid government since finally wrestling the evils of hyperinflation under control, she is a force to be reckoned with. Strategic location, educated population, solid civil and women's rights thanks to Ataturk, when Turkey cuts off relations with Israel, it is a cymbal clanging that must be heard and moved toward by the powers of this planet.

As I have said, it has been very interesting to me to see Israel's very, unprecedented, low profile in the Arab Spring and now Libya and even with Palestine's rocketing her southern border, still Israel remains seemingly undeterred and resilient. Hum, me thinks?  And then I see this today with Turkey cutting off economic, defense and diplomatic relations with Israel when for years Turkey has been the only  major Middle Eastern power that has aligned with Israel thus aiding in stabilizing the anarchy-driven region. 

I have many great Turkish friends from my Goodyear days and some excellent former Turkish students that I enlist, please, to comment to this blog and my thesis on this situation which I find very troubling; even more troubling than the Dow, gold, etc.  This carries tremendous global implication that can explode in one bombing sortie in Iran, Syria, etc, etc.  Hum, me thinks?  Why has Israel remained so quiet and below the radar?  Me thinks the US diplomats have provided great wealth and support to pay for this low profile and if so, there is a price yet to be paid; a price that could be a bounced check with the financial resource the US now does not have.

I learned a great theory once about the bear and the jelly beans /// a man is driving through the park and always wanted to see a bear. He saw one, stopped his car and rolled down his window offering the bear a jelly bean. The bear comes over, paws on car and the bear and the man develop a friendship / bearship, as long as the jelly beans last.  When the man feeds the bear that last jelly bean, we can imagine what happens with the still hungry bear, right?  I cannot escape the application of the illustration with Israel being the bear and the US doling out the jelly beans.  I am only speculating but ...!

An alarmist I am not! A concerned man that watched the horizon, absolutely!  This man is concerned and this is the genesis of my latest increased level of concern:

The Wall Street Journal

Turkey Suspends Defense Trade With Israel


ISTANBUL—Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said Tuesday that his country was suspending defense trade with Israel and that Turkish naval vessels would be seen in the eastern Mediterranean more often, as Ankara ratcheted up pressure in a rising dispute with its former ally.
Speaking to reporters in Ankara after giving a speech at the Ankara Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Erdogan repeated plans announced Friday to downgrade diplomatic relations with the Jewish state and suspend military agreements, specifying that the suspension would include trade in defense goods.
Reuters
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
"Trade relations, military relations, defense industry—these we will suspend. These will be completely frozen and that process will be followed also by very different sanctions," Mr. Erdogan said.

Those measures still to come would be a "Plan C" to the "Plan B" already announced, he added.
So far, Turkey has announced no general trade sanctions against Israel. A spokesman for Mr. Erdogan said the prime minister had been referring in his remarks only to trade in defense goods, and not to trade in general. On Monday, Turkey's economy minister had said there would be no broader trade sanctions "for now."

The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined to comment Tuesday. Other Israeli officials contacted said privately that they don't wish to engage Mr. Erdogan in a public debate so as not to be seen as further aggravating political ties.

Turkey has said it is responding to Israel's continued refusal to apologize for the killing by Israeli commandos of eight Turkish citizens and one Turkish-American on board the Mavi Marmara aid ship, as it sought to break Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip in May last year.

Zalman Shoval, a former Israeli ambassador to the U.S. who works with the Israeli government, called Mr. Erdogan's comments part of Turkey's "childish'' reaction to the United Nations report released last week that stated the blockade was justified, but that Israel's use of force was "excessive and unreasonable."

Turkey and Israel did nearly $3.5 billion of trade in 2010, according to official Turkish figures, a record reached during a sharp downturn in the political relationship. Moreover, trade rose more than 25% in the first half of this year, compared with the same period last year, Israeli and Turkish figures show.

Separate data for defense-related trade weren't available. Past major deals, however, included a $600 million-$700 million agreement under which Israel modernized Turkey's aging Phantom F-4 jets, and a $668 million pact to upgrade its M-60 tanks. Last year, Turkey took delivery of 10 Israeli-built Heron unmanned aerial vehicles, a $183 million deal.

Officials and analysts say those contracts are complete and no new large agreements have been signed for several years as political relations soured. Now, the main potential loss is the purchase of spare parts from Israel, should Turkey strictly enforce its own embargo. Turkey's defense exports to Israel tend to be lower-end equipment, such as uniforms, analysts said.

A report released last month by Tepav, an Ankara-based think tank, said past Turkish threats to cut off trade with Israel haven't hit trade as a whole, which has seen a healthy expansion. Most of the business is in the private sector and the two economies complement each other, the report said. Turkey is strong in construction, chemicals and textiles, while Israel offers software and other technology products from industries that are weak elsewhere in the region.

"Business has become an area immune from political upheavals," the report said. "The threats of canceling large infrastructure projects and other joint ventures have not gone beyond words. As a matter of fact, most of the projects involve private companies. Furthermore, boycotting of member nations is against OECD rules."

Both Turkey and Israel are members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Responding to a question about reports that Turkey would begin patrolling waters off Israel and whether that risked conflict, Prime Minister Erdogan said Turkey had a right to do so. "The eastern Mediterranean is not a foreign place to us. … Of course, our vessels will be seen from now on very often in these waters," he said.

He also confirmed he would be traveling to Egypt soon, and said he "might" visit Gaza. A spokesman for Mr. Erdogan said the visit to Cairo would take place between Sept. 12 and 14.

—Joshua Mitnik in Tel Aviv
contributed to this aritcle.
Write to Marc Champion at marc.champion@wsj.com

Free or Equal ---- chicken or the egg?

A former student sent me a link: http://ideasmatter.typepad.com/ideas-matter/2010/12/free-or-equal-with-johan-norberg-preview-clip.html that I watched but then was able to watch the entire program on TV later last evening.  I am trying to lay hands on the DVD for it is a powerful work featuring Milton Friedman and his great work as background but with modern status of location and status of Friedman's concept four decades later.  I was spellbound and hope you can find a way to watch this whole video.

In what seems a world gone wild in this early part of our new century, the context of Friedman and thus the video rests upon two pillars for an economy; citizenry freedom or Economic control.  The thesis is, of course, the power of what Adam Smith postulated in his Wealth of Nations in 1775 that economic forces will, over time self correct the ills and misalignment of economies for the ultimate good of the consumer. AMEN says I!  Friedman, to prove his thesis went to the most unrestricted government on earth at the time, Hong Kong. What he found was a thriving economy, poor but  striving to grow, but with zero interference from the government in the form of tariffs, taxes, protectionist legislation, none and the country blossomed to one of the richest nations on earth.

Then Friedman, rightly, parallelled the Hong Kong miracle, Smith wrote about three hundred years before, with the US which has built an impossible tax structure, protectionists barriers from top to bottom, seems to abhor tree trade agreements and we can all see today the impact of all of that.  Smith spoke of the Invisible Hand that, unseen, but always present in every single transaction large or small thus a metaphor for an economic system where the consumer, unhindered by government interference, will find a way to make, sell, shift the factors of production to maximize the existing pull by the consumer but agile enough to shift those factor away when the demand slowly due to over supply.

I guess I am yet again beating the drum for a return to a true Free Market.  Unions do not like that. Legislators apparently abhor it but three centuries of proof should at least merit serious consideration. There is simply far too much government INTERFERENCE in the gearing of the market based economy. Even China, a free market economy but with a Communist form of government, sees the ills of a socialistic economic system and we can see her growth abounding.

The aggregate of Smith and the video is that you can have an economy without freedom but you will never have a growing, bustling economy until you have personal and economic freedom first.  We see almost daily basic freedoms in the nations being overtaken by governmental czars, commissions, court interpretation and thus we see a stagnated economy and an abysmal economic growth.  Perhaps we should blow the dust of Wealth of Nations and give it a whirl again?

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Where is your fight, Mr. President? Me thinks you have none thus we have no further need of you, Sir.

Well Good Morning to you avid readers of the gospel of the NY Times but I am liking Ms Dowd more and more for she, like her WSJ colleague, are two excellent writers with an iron fist with the silk glove in their opinions and I find both refreshing, to the point and very on-target. This president is parallized by self infliction I believe and finds himself totally over his head which is sad, truly sad but all the evidence is blatant.

As this Presidency has painfally dragged on I can only speak for myself but I have watched a nation so rallied and adrenalined up that the million or so on the inauguration grounds got me sort of excited. Having grown up in the racial ravages of the Southern 50's and 60's, I had this sense I was given a chance in my 60's to see a super star rise from the ashes of the Civil Rights scars to a place of real leadership. While I did not vote for him I was frankly proud of him and shared the hopes of many.

But, much like capitalism, this president has self destructed on so many fronts with jobs being the current tip of the poisoned spearhead. Each time I read that the government must create more jobs,I take a deep pause for it is NOT THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT TO CREATE JOBS for that is the private sector that actually makes stuff  for a profit or loss. Just yesteday I was reminded that business, generally is pretty good but BUT for the government bureaucracy that now exists in attaining capital loans being slowed to snail pace due to government red tape. How sad but how true! And this revelation is from a CEO friend of an excellent local company.  Government must clear out the impediments to the sourcing of investment capital and not try siphone more tax dollars or borrowed dollars from foreign govenments taking on more US influence via the debt load of our future we are selling the Piper for the US rats will, by definition, have to dance to their tune ... and we are dancing in high steps!

I keep having this sense that this president, as we all have faced in our lives, has come to that place where all leaders do that this thing they aspired to is really so much biggier than he that it is just too big and too ugly and too fraught with difficulty to climb out of the ever deepening hole.  This is seasoned terribly with the continuing press of the lavish lifestyle of his wife, inordinate costs to support the First Family on visits when we the common folks are struggling. Leaders should be forced to struggle for that therefore feeds the tabloid view of this president really staying above the swamp, remaining aloof and elitist in gut level actions which only serves to feed the angst of the public and world is feeling.

The Bible speaks at great length in the Old Testament that kings are successful by the advisors the puts around him assuming that means he listens. I am pretty much convinced he calls them toegther, gets the photo ops, drinks a coffee and thanks them and departs on his own agenda; an agenda even his party has apparently stepped back from.  As tis article points out, it is pretty telling when the Wus of the Decade in Harry Reid states the president needs to be more aggressive. that is a sad testimony!

Yes, I am very disappointed in this president for so many great hopes for so many people be dashed on the rocks of uncaring, elitism, a sense of aloofness form the common man.  I want a president to focus on the needs of ME and not synonymed by descriptors of knucking, duck and weave and simply not taking on the fight.  FIGHT MR PRESDENT. Show the world you can rise about being so presidential ands do something to mark your tenure. Right now your marks are pocks markets after a long winter. You sir have disappointed me on a scale with Carter and honestly I thought that an impossible new low to be attained but you have!

September 3, 2011
One and Done?


WASHINGTON
ONE day during the 2008 campaign, as Barack Obama read the foreboding news of the mounting economic and military catastrophes that W. was bequeathing his successor, he dryly remarked to aides: “Maybe I should throw the game.”
On the razor’s edge of another recession; blocked at every turn by Republicans determined to slice him up at any cost; starting an unexpectedly daunting re-election bid; and puzzling over how to make a prime-time speech about infrastructure and payroll taxes soar, maybe President Obama is wishing that he had thrown the game.
The leader who was once a luminescent, inspirational force is now just a guy in a really bad spot.
His Republican rivals for 2012 have gone to town on the Labor Day weekend news of zero job growth, using the same line of attack Hillary used in 2008: Enough with the big speeches! What about some action?
Polls show that most Americans still like and trust the president; but they may no longer have faith that he’s a smarty-pants who can fix the economy.
Just as Obama miscalculated in 2009 when Democrats had total control of Congress, holding out hope that G.O.P. lawmakers would come around on health care after all but three senators had refused to vote for the stimulus bill; just as he misread John Boehner this summer, clinging like a scorned lover to a dream that the speaker would drop his demanding new inamorata, the Tea Party, to strike a “grand” budget bargain, so the president once more set a trap for himself and gave Boehner the opportunity to dis him on the timing of his jobs speech this week.
Obama’s re-election chances depend on painting the Republicans as disrespectful. So why would the White House act disrespectful by scheduling a speech to a joint session of Congress at the exact time when the Republicans already had a debate planned?
And why is the White House so cocky about Obama as a TV draw against quick-draw Rick Perry? As James Carville acerbically noted, given a choice between watching an Obama speech and a G.O.P. debate, “I’d watch the debate, and I’m
The White House caved, of course, and moved to Thursday, because there’s nothing the Republicans say that he won’t eagerly meet halfway.
No. 2 on David Letterman’s Top Ten List of the president’s plans for Labor Day: “Pretty much whatever the Republicans tell him he can do.”
On MSNBC, the anchors were wistfully listening to old F.D.R. speeches, wishing that this president had some of that fight. But Obama can’t turn into F.D.R. for the campaign because he aspires to the class that F.D.R. was a traitor to; and he can’t turn into Harry Truman because he lacks the common touch. He has an acquired elitism.
MSNBC’s Matt Miller offered “a public service” to journalists talking about Obama — a list of synonyms for cave: “Buckle, fold, concede, bend, defer, submit, give in, knuckle under, kowtow, surrender, yield, comply, capitulate.”
And it wasn’t exactly Morning in America when Obama sent out a mass e-mail to supporters Wednesday under the heading “Frustrated.”
It unfortunately echoed a November 2010 parody in The Onion with the headline, “Frustrated Obama Sends Nation Rambling 75,000-Word E-Mail.”
“Throughout,” The Onion teased, “the president expressed his aggravation on subjects as disparate as the war in Afghanistan, the sluggish economic recovery, his live-in mother-in-law, China’s undervalued currency, Boston’s Logan Airport, and tort reform.”
You know you’re in trouble when Harry Reid says you should be more aggressive.
If the languid Obama had not done his usual irritating fourth-quarter play, if he had presented a jobs plan a year ago and fought for it, he wouldn’t have needed to elevate the setting. How will he up the ante next time? A speech from the space station?
Republicans who are worried about being political props have a point. The president is using the power of the incumbency and a sacred occasion for a political speech.
Obama is still suffering from the Speech Illusion, the idea that he can come down from the mountain, read from a Teleprompter, cast a magic spell with his words and climb back up the mountain, while we scurry around and do what he proclaimed.
The days of spinning illusions in a Greek temple in a football stadium are done. The One is dancing on the edge of one term.
The White House team is flailing — reacting, regrouping, retrenching. It’s repugnant.
After pushing and shoving and caving to get on TV, the president’s advisers immediately began warning that the long-yearned-for jobs speech wasn’t going to be that awe-inspiring.
“The issue isn’t the size or the newness of the ideas,” one said. “It’s less the substance than how he says it, whether he seizes the moment.”
The arc of justice is stuck at the top of a mountain. Maybe Obama was not even the person he was waiting for.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Stepping in a can of fire ants ....

Earlier this week on CNN, I watched two very intelligent contributors vie with each other on live TV. One a Republican and the other a Democrat. Both seasoned veterans of the political wars, both seen almost daily on CNN, both professors, both opinionated, both women.  Wolf Blitzer was asking a question, I do not even recall, but the Democrat female, Donna Brazille in a heartbeat when from gentle, poignant and articulate to angry, bitter and attacking in response Madilyn Matlin, a white woman Republican that made some comment, positive, about a documentary Glen Beck had just completed on the history of blacks in America. I mean it conversation went bullistic in two breaths and Mr. Blitzer lost control.

Mr. Blitzer and I and the millions watching were momentarily taken aback at how quickly the arguing escalated. The offensive by Ms Brazille, obvious not a fan of Beck, nor am I, was about how could a white man have any clue about the history of black people.   The bitterness raged on national TV in a most shocking way but in that electric shock I was witnessing, I found myself, a man from Alabama, drilling into my thoughts on racism.

You see, in our family, now a little over a year ago, we welcomed in a precious little girl our son and his family has adopted and brought home from Ethiopia.  Was I fully invested and supportive of this venture as it moved forward from thought to deed; honestly not. I chose to pretty much stay on the sidelines of all the things involved with an international adoption.  However, I realized my whole heart experienced a paradigm shift that hot afternoon at the Cleveland Airport when we saw our son and his wife and this precious, jet black, curly haired, big eyed child that engaged everyone around her. Even after nearly thirty hours in the air, she seems excited to be in the embrace of her new family.  My heart was touched and continues to be with each story of her antics and each time I get to hold her, swim with her, listen to her sing, watch her dance, touch my face with her nose as her Poppy kiss.

At a much deeper, and frankly uglier, perspective, I realize she has cast from me every negative thought I ever had at not only blacks but whites, browns, yellows and all the other colors or descriptors that segregate thoughts toward others not like me.  I must tell you how freeing that is.  And more importantly, it is not about the news or TV or a mother or father, IT IS A CHOICE!

Having grown up in a highly segregated South during the 1960s and remember clearly the police state in Birmingham, the bus burning in Anniston, the march from Selma to Montgomery, seeing MLK lead a march in my home town in 1962 and through all of those now historic events, feeling a sense of corporate frustration about why "they" (the blacks) were causing all this trouble.  Hearing George Wallace, Bull Connor and the other pacesetters of segregation heap more coals in the fires of an inflamed culture was part of my memory that will never fully go away.  Having the first black student bussed into my high school in 1966 to be the first and only black to graduate that year from an all white high school was, now, sickening to me for I became friends with that young black, Leroy Gray and would be angered by what I saw him have to endure from friends of mine. SIMPLY SICKENS me now.  I remember going to Sears as a young boy in Gadsden and sneaking around to drink from the Colored water fountain to see if the water really did taste different than the White water fountain, watching blacks go to the same doctor I did but have to go to his backdoor for access. I questioned it then but very lightly for, well, that was the cultural normal, right?

So why have I chosen to focus on this this day.  The article I will paste in below from today's NY Times focused my mind on really how little progress this nation has made.  I detest racism in any form or magnitude and Ms Hope Williams has been the best medicine I could ever take.  My challenge to you is to do a deep inward assessment of your own deeply ingrained thoughts on this for it, believe me, is a poison that is culturally lethal. Sure, there are still far too many things that trigger that which is buried in each of us from an array of sources.   Today I will sing in a jail service and I know before I get there that well above 70% of those there will be African American. Does that then mean that over 70% of African Americans in the aggregate society are worthless degenerates and deserve all the bad they get. ABSOLUTELY NOT!

My greatest regret is that it took a little African child that hugged me in Cleveland to rip all the cobwebs of racial thoughts from my heart. Bad people are bad not because of their skin color but because they have chosen to be bad; it really is that simple.  Statistics will lead you down paths that are at times wrong.  Such as, a new one, the unemployment in the US is still at 9.1% yet within that 48% of black teens are unemployed.  Think about the implication of that going forward in a world floating in debt. Frightening isn't it but it is a color on the canvas of our portrait in the 21st century.

I have waxed long enough but will close with, please, self exam the real WHY you feel as you about those that do not look like you, sound like you, smell like, eat like you and I would say the common denominator to your assessment is, well, YOU!  So my title, Stepping in a can of fire ants is pretty appropriate for this topic stings, hurts, admonishes and challenges us to be better. We MUST!

CANNOT wait to hold Ms Hope Tesfanesh tomorrow and love her unceasingly.


September 2, 2011

On Race, the Silence Is Bipartisan

THE economic crisis in the United States is also a racial crisis. White Americans are hurting, but nonwhite Americans are hurting even more. Yet leaders in both political parties — for different reasons — continue to act as though race were anachronistic and irrelevant in a country where an African-American is the president.

In July, the unemployment rate was 8.2 percent for whites, but 16.8 percent for blacks and 11.3 percent for Latinos. The Pew Research Center estimates that in 2009, the median household net worth was $5,677 for blacks, $6,325 for Hispanics and $113,149 for whites — down from $12,124, $18,539 and $134,992, respectively, in 2005.

All groups have suffered from high unemployment, the mortgage meltdown and soaring health care costs, but African-Americans and Hispanics started far behind and continue to fall behind. In 2009, 35 percent of black households and 31 percent of Latino households had zero or negative wealth, compared with 15 percent of white households.

Since the end of legal segregation in the 1960s, there have been two approaches to ameliorating racial inequality. Conservatives and most Republican politicians insist that laws be colorblind and that race-conscious measures like affirmative action should be ended. Liberals and most Democratic politicians favor such measures, mindful of the burdens of past and present discrimination.

For most of the nation’s history, the two major parties were internally divided over racial issues. But today, racial policy positions align almost perfectly with the party system. The two parties, which openly clashed over race from the late 1970s through the mid-1990s, have for the last decade pretty much agreed not to talk about race — a silence that impedes progress toward racial equality.

Democrats mention race as little as possible, even though minority voters are crucial constituents, because colorblind positions are far more politically popular. Affirmative action has been supported in every Democratic presidential platform since 1972, but since the Reagan era, Democrats speak of it less and less.

President Obama, for example, does not openly renounce affirmative action, but he pragmatically stresses universal social programs like health care. He manages to avoid appearing especially concerned about African-Americans.

This tack leaves modern Republicans with little to criticize, lest they appear to be race-baiting, so they too keep quiet.

Advocates of both colorblind and race-conscious approaches to public policy now claim the mantle of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s civil rights agenda and his call for people to be judged by their character, not their skin. Though Republicans claim that free-market policies will lift all boats and Democrats hope that “universal” measures to combat economic inequality will benefit all groups, racial inequality has endured.

As studies of employment and real estate practices begun during the Reagan era have consistently shown, racial discrimination persists. And “race neutral” economic measures backed by Democrats, like the Earned Income Tax Credit and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, have proved too limited to aid many poorer blacks and Hispanics.

Political leaders must openly recognize that we cannot progress either by ignoring race or focusing exclusively on it. It is not only legitimate, but also essential, to evaluate policy options partly on the basis of whether they are likely to reduce or increase racial inequalities.

Compromise policies — measures that are not explicitly race-targeted but are chosen partly because they will benefit nonwhites especially — should become the basis for policy debates.
For example, without using explicit racial classifications, we can devise districts and situate homes in ways that are more likely to produce integrated schools and neighborhoods.

We can adopt employment tests that are fair and inclusive and do a better job at predicting job performance than many Civil Service exams now do.

And we can do more to ensure that our criminal laws do not target crimes more typical of urban Hispanics and blacks, like crack cocaine use, more strongly than crimes typical of suburban whites, like powder cocaine use.

Both parties should accept that the question of whether policies help narrow the racial divide must be part of the discussion. After all, it was the Republican-led search for racial progress in the 1860s and the Democratic-led fight for civil rights in the 1960s — buttressed, of course, by African-Americans’ own freedom struggle — that allowed the election of a black president in 2008.

Desmond S. King, a professor of American government at Oxford University, and Rogers M. Smith, a professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania, are the authors of “Still a House Divided: Race and Politics in Obama’s America.”

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Life takes meaning only as the causes to which you attach yourself ...

That title comes from GEN Donn Starry that was part of the memorial service for this Warrior.  The implication of that statement is compelling but let me quote it fully:

"But I suggest that your life takes on meaning only as the causes to which you attach yourself have meaning; that the greatest value of a life is to spend it for something that lives after it; that in the end you become what you are through some cause you have made your own.  And if you follow that line of reasoning deciding about the part God plays in your world is important ..."  Starry

That insight from Starry has really bored into my inner being for it has caused me to really think about and question in my own life that which I value in looking at the causes that are important to me since it is those causes that will live on after me.  Starry is absolutely correct.  So today has been emotional but cathartic.  Catharsis is a good thing!!

Through this day I have realized more succinctly than ever before that educating the leaders of tomorrow is my calling and God has gifted me for that calling. I can say that with no ego at all for I truly believe that. But the greater reality is that God gifts each of His children and it is for us to find that gift, develop that gift and USE that gift through the good times and the bad times.

There have been times since my retirement eight years ago when I felt like what I wanted to do was to go back into full time employment in a leadership role. But each time I would start down that path, the path would curve back to that which I glean the most pleasure from and that is teaching university students.

The rewards for being in God's Will, doing the work He has assigned me are innumerable.  I draw passion, strength, deeper learning, seek to understand more deeply all that is around me and the list goes on.  I can say that I have come to that point in my life where I can say I truly do love what I realize has been my calling my whole life.  I have had friends, close friends, that have told me that but was usually was met with deaf my ear from me or a sense of frustration or almost anger to hear those words in my own defense.

Today has been the hitching post  through all the ceremony of the Starry memorial, the emotion of it all, investing that time with my daugher that I found myself staring at at times thinking about how pretty she is, what a great wife and mother she is and not to mention such a great daughter.  Today has been like I was standing a a room of mirrors in which every flaw, every crevice, every wart was exposed to the sunlight of life's reality.  So to GEN Starry's thesis, what are the causes in my life I invest myself in that will live after me?

My list is short but powerful so I wish to share it with you:
  1. My relationship with my God
  2. My family
  3. My teaching
  4. My music
All four of those will outlive me I believe and thus I recommit myself to those four and not the other ten or twenty I at times get sideswiped by.  So GEN Starry, thank you for opening up the pathway to my inner heart through your touch on my life even in death for it has renewed me. I feel revived, eager and wanting to be the best I can be against the backboard of my four.

What are your four?  Seriously, I think you should really, really, really do that exercise.

A Great Warrior Memorialized This Day ..

Have just awakened from a crazy night of dreaming all linked to a memorial service of a great and powerful Four Star General I have written about in the last few days, Donn Starry.  As my mind unwinds from a night of some degree of sleep and the still darkness of the night abounds outside my windows. I cannot escape the parallels of life and the poignant shades of meaning that resides with each.  This week I have started a new class with twenty-four students. This week I have attended a memorial service of a tiny, sweet, gentle 92 year old precious lady from my church and this day I will attend the memorial service with full military honors along with my precious daughter where this General is the common link now nearly four decades ago.  This week I will sing a Southern Gospel concert to lift praises to our God as those praises touch those that will make their way to that event.

This morning I find myself thinking deeply about life, death, permanent impressions, lasting experiences and find myself reflecting on the many things I have been given the opportunity to do in my own life and yet feeling inadequate that I yet not done enough.  My brain is running an eclectic slide show of missed opportunities to positively affect many others that have and will be put in my path on this journey of life.  I guess that is what memorials do is cause you to stop and reflect.  A tiny lady and a great warrior.  A new crop of students fearful yet eager to learn under my influence.  Those are three adjoining parallels that have come full force in my slumbering mind this night.  What does it all mean?  Honestly, I am still pondering that but here are a few things I know if I may share with you this early morning ...

God has granted me audience with many great and powerful leaders and many gentle, caring, loving people each of which have touched my heartstrings in so many ways.  God has given me a family that is close, love each other and we care for each other.  As each day passes I realize the phenomenal value of God's greatest creation which are His people.  I love people. I love to be around people. I love to watch people and how they choose to deal with the events in their life. I love that I get to teach people and to get to sing to people via that amazing power of a message in song. 

As this day begins here in Northeast Ohio, it will be yet another amazing journey no doubt. I know now sitting in the memorial service for the great warrior general next to my daughter will be a memory made I will carry for me the rest of my days.  I know this week of amazing interwoven parallels of this life will be burned into my hard drive.  Shedding tears at the memorial service for this precious 92 year old lady that loved me earlier this week in the same week where a spectacular ceremony will be witnessed with full military honors.  In this same span of a week meeting twenty-four young, fresh minds of some great young people I will work closely with over the next fifteen weeks and then into their future and then getting to sing in concert Friday night; wow, talk about a filled week!

Poignancy, Praise and Preparation ... my Three P's for this week in this life.  Every moment is a chance for preparation.  Never waste a moment for you are wasting time and time is a great gift as I am sure you know.  So regardless of the size or number of the alligators in your swamp this day, find a way to affect someone's life around you in a positive direction. 

I know this will be an amazing day, yet another amazing day for me.  Sitting with my beautiful daughter in that memorial service for GEN Starry's home going will be stunning for it was she that was the nucleus that drew she and I and GEN Starry together in a Commissary at Fort Knox as I frantically found my lost two year old under the protection of this same general thirty-five yeas ago.  This will be an emotional and yet inspiring day and to just get to be part of it is simply humbling to me.

Today; make a difference in somebody's life for that difference will change a direction of that life; that is pretty powerful stuff isn't it. THAT is why I love getting to teach and to sing; it changes lives!